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- members members members area | WordReference Forums
One is not necessarily correct over the others - member's area = an area of a member, belonging to a member - members' area = an area of members, belonging to more than one member - members area = an area for members That is exactly the problem I have been having so far
- member: miembro, socio, cliente. . . ? | WordReference Forums
Welcome to the forum, yoelcita Para un club, yo diría "socio" y para un gimnasio "socio" o "cliente", ahora en España si el gimnasio es público o municipal, se utiliza mucho "usuario" Estaba pensando que también se dice "miembro del club", pero no de un gimnasio A ver qué dicen los demás
- faculty or faculty member - WordReference Forums
I often see people use the word 'faculty' to refer to a faculty member I have seen this used by Americans also Are 'faculty' and 'faculty member' both mean the same?
- A group of people + is are ? | WordReference Forums
Collecting phrases like a number of or a pair of can make it hard to choose between is and are Which verb do you use when you’re talking about a number of people? On one hand, number is singular, which calls for is But people is plural, which calls for are Typically, it’s best to use are with a number of Correct A number of people are concerned about the lack of progress Incorrect A
- confirm whether if I am correct | WordReference Forums
Could some member s confirm whether if I am correct? 1 Is the question correctly phrased? 2, If it is, should I use 'whether' or 'if'? Thanks in advance
- Dear parents Parents [Capital letters?] - WordReference Forums
Should I always capitalize the word "parents" in informal letters or emails when use it with "Dear "? Are there any rules?
- Difference between dedicated for dedicated to
Hi! I would like to know what's the difference between "dedicated for" "dedicated to" Could someone explain it to me please?
- He is my family lt;member gt;. | WordReference Forums
He is family which means he is a family member, right? In this case,is “family” an adjective? I looked up the dictionary, found “family” as an adjective Thank you so much! Yes, you’ve hit the nail on the head! In this case, ‘family’ is indeed an adjective (only colloquially), describing him ‘as being a family member’
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